If Stock = 80, Strike = 80, RFR = 10 percent, Time = 1 year, and Call = 10, what is the Put price? (Assume X=80 is face value).

Correct answer: 2.73

Explanation

P = B + C - S. B=72.73. P = 72.73 + 10 - 80 = 2.73.

Other questions

Question 1

According to the Put-Call Parity equation, which portfolio is equivalent to a Fiduciary Call?

Question 2

What represents 'B' in the mnemonic 'Sip Pepsi = Be Cool' (S + P = B + C)?

Question 3

Which of the following correctly describes a 'Protective Put'?

Question 4

If you want to create a Synthetic Call option, which positions should you take?

Question 5

The Put-Call Parity relationship applies strictly to which type of options?

Question 6

Using the Put-Call Parity, what is the formula for a Synthetic Put?

Question 7

In a synthetic position, what does a negative sign (-) typically indicate?

Question 8

Calculate the price of a European Call option if: Stock = 100, Put = 5, PV of Strike (Bond) = 90.

Question 9

Calculate the price of the underlying Stock if: Call = 12, Put = 7, PV of Strike = 50.

Question 10

What constitutes a 'Fiduciary Call'?

Question 11

In Put-Call Forward Parity, the spot price (S) is replaced by which expression?

Question 12

If a firm is considered insolvent (Value of Assets < Debt), what is the payoff to shareholders?

Question 13

Viewed as an option, a firm's equity is equivalent to:

Question 14

What represents the 'Strike Price' in the analogy where Equity is a Call Option on the firm?

Question 15

If risk-free rates (RFR) increase, what is the impact on the value of a Call Option based on the parity logic shown?

Question 16

Calculate the value of a Bond (PV of Strike) in a parity arbitrage scenario if: Stock = 50, Put = 3, Call = 8.

Question 17

A Synthetic Long Bond is created by:

Question 18

If the market price of a Call is 10, but the synthetic call (S + P - B) is calculated at 12, what arbitrage action should be taken?

Question 19

In the Put-Call Forward Parity equation, if the Forward Price is F, what is the formula for the Synthetic Call?

Question 20

What is the payoff to debtholders if a firm is insolvent (Value of Assets < Debt)?

Question 21

Calculate the PV of the Strike Price (Bond) if Strike = 105, RFR = 5 percent, and time to maturity = 1 year.

Question 23

A portfolio of Long Stock + Long Put is used to limit downside risk. This is known as:

Question 24

Identify the incorrect rearrangement of the Put-Call Parity formula (S + P = B + C).

Question 25

If a Put option is priced at 5, Stock is 50, PV of Strike is 48, and Call is priced at 6, does an arbitrage opportunity exist?

Question 26

In the arbitrage scenario where S+P = 55 and B+C = 54, what is the correct strategy?

Question 27

A 'Synthetic Stock' position is constructed by:

Question 28

If the Spot Price (S) is 100 and the Risk-Free Rate is 5 percent (T=1), what is the Forward Price (F) used in parity?

Question 29

In the Merton corporate bond model, the value of the firm's debt is equal to:

Question 30

If a Call is 10, Put is 10, and PV of Strike is 100, what must the Stock price be for parity to hold?

Question 31

Which component in Put-Call Parity accounts for the time value of money related to the strike price?

Question 32

The equation 'Stock + Put = Bond + Call' implies that:

Question 33

Using Put-Call Forward Parity, if F = 105, X = 105, RFR = 5 percent (T=1), and C = 5, what is the value of P?

Question 34

If Risk-Free Rate increases, what happens to the price of a Put option (holding other factors constant)?

Question 35

Which position allows an investor to borrow money at the risk-free rate synthetically?

Question 36

Calculate C if S=50, P=2, X=50, RFR=0 percent (T=1).

Question 37

In the firm value analogy, if a company has Assets of 100 and Debt of 80, the 'option' is:

Question 38

If implied volatility increases, what generally happens to both Call and Put prices?

Question 39

To create a 'Synthetic Short Put', what positions are required?

Question 40

Which condition allows for the substitution of S with PV(F) in parity equations?

Question 41

If the equation S + P = B + C is violated, what is the immediate implication?

Question 42

Calculate the Synthetic Call price if Forward Price = 105, Strike = 100, RFR = 5 percent (T=1), Put = 3.

Question 43

What is the primary reason American options might not fit the 'Sip Pepsi = Be Cool' formula exactly?

Question 44

For a solvent firm, the value of Debt (D) plus the value of Equity (E) equals:

Question 45

When rearranging the formula to S = B + C - P, what does the term 'B' represent in an investment context?

Question 46

Which strategy mimics owning the stock using derivatives?

Question 47

If Spot = 100, Call = 5, Put = 5, and Strike = 100, what is the implied Risk-Free Rate?

Question 48

The combination of a Long Call and a Short Put with the same strike and maturity creates a position similar to:

Question 49

Put-Call Parity is effectively an application of:

Question 50

If a firm is solvent, shareholders receive: